Request Methods¶
-
class
urllib3.request.
RequestMethods
(headers=None)¶ Bases:
object
Convenience mixin for classes who implement a
urlopen()
method, such asurllib3.HTTPConnectionPool
andurllib3.PoolManager
.Provides behavior for making common types of HTTP request methods and decides which type of request field encoding to use.
Specifically,
request_encode_url()
is for sending requests whose fields are encoded in the URL (such as GET, HEAD, DELETE).request_encode_body()
is for sending requests whose fields are encoded in the body of the request using multipart or www-form-urlencoded (such as for POST, PUT, PATCH).request()
is for making any kind of request, it will look up the appropriate encoding format and use one of the above two methods to make the request.Initializer parameters:
- Parameters
headers – Headers to include with all requests, unless other headers are given explicitly.
-
request
(method, url, fields=None, headers=None, **urlopen_kw)¶ Make a request using
urlopen()
with the appropriate encoding offields
based on themethod
used.This is a convenience method that requires the least amount of manual effort. It can be used in most situations, while still having the option to drop down to more specific methods when necessary, such as
request_encode_url()
,request_encode_body()
, or even the lowest levelurlopen()
.
-
request_encode_body
(method, url, fields=None, headers=None, encode_multipart=True, multipart_boundary=None, **urlopen_kw)¶ Make a request using
urlopen()
with thefields
encoded in the body. This is useful for request methods like POST, PUT, PATCH, etc.When
encode_multipart=True
(default), thenurllib3.encode_multipart_formdata()
is used to encode the payload with the appropriate content type. Otherwiseurllib.parse.urlencode()
is used with the ‘application/x-www-form-urlencoded’ content type.Multipart encoding must be used when posting files, and it’s reasonably safe to use it in other times too. However, it may break request signing, such as with OAuth.
Supports an optional
fields
parameter of key/value strings AND key/filetuple. A filetuple is a (filename, data, MIME type) tuple where the MIME type is optional. For example:fields = { 'foo': 'bar', 'fakefile': ('foofile.txt', 'contents of foofile'), 'realfile': ('barfile.txt', open('realfile').read()), 'typedfile': ('bazfile.bin', open('bazfile').read(), 'image/jpeg'), 'nonamefile': 'contents of nonamefile field', }
When uploading a file, providing a filename (the first parameter of the tuple) is optional but recommended to best mimic behavior of browsers.
Note that if
headers
are supplied, the ‘Content-Type’ header will be overwritten because it depends on the dynamic random boundary string which is used to compose the body of the request. The random boundary string can be explicitly set with themultipart_boundary
parameter.
-
request_encode_url
(method, url, fields=None, headers=None, **urlopen_kw)¶ Make a request using
urlopen()
with thefields
encoded in the url. This is useful for request methods like GET, HEAD, DELETE, etc.
-
urlopen
(method, url, body=None, headers=None, encode_multipart=True, multipart_boundary=None, **kw)¶